The market moves as it moves—don't fight the trend, work with it.
If the downtrend is running, respect it. If momentum is climbing upward, follow it. There's no point forcing trades against the current; the market will punish that arrogance.
The real trap? Jumping in too early on what *looks* like a reversal. Catching a falling knife because you believe "it has to bounce" is how accounts blow up. Wait for actual confirmation—watch for structure shifts, volume patterns, momentum changes. Only when these signals stack up should you consider positioning.
Keep it simple: trade what's actually there, not what you hope will happen next.
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ser_aped.eth
· 7h ago
Basically, don't blindly buy the dip. When the market falls, follow the decline; buy back during the rebound. Simple and straightforward, but effective.
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WalletManager
· 7h ago
That's right, I've seen too many people bottom-fishing until they go bankrupt. On-chain data is right there—RSI, trading volume, these indicators don't lie—what matters is whether you're willing to wait for that confirmation signal to appear. Most people lose because they're impatient.
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PumpDetector
· 7h ago
catching knives is a skill issue, not a feature. read the order flow, not your hopium.
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SchrodingersFOMO
· 7h ago
This sounds simple, but few people actually do it. I myself was caught by the phrase "it must rebound," and my account almost couldn't be saved.
The market moves as it moves—don't fight the trend, work with it.
If the downtrend is running, respect it. If momentum is climbing upward, follow it. There's no point forcing trades against the current; the market will punish that arrogance.
The real trap? Jumping in too early on what *looks* like a reversal. Catching a falling knife because you believe "it has to bounce" is how accounts blow up. Wait for actual confirmation—watch for structure shifts, volume patterns, momentum changes. Only when these signals stack up should you consider positioning.
Keep it simple: trade what's actually there, not what you hope will happen next.